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  1. From the time she moved to France in 1903 until her death in Neuilly-sur-Seine in 1946, American writer Gertrude Stein was a central figure in the Parisian art world. An advocate of the avant garde, Stein helped shape an artistic movement that demanded a novel...

  2. 5 de feb. de 2024 · A hundred and fifty years ago, American Modernist literature was born to Amelia and Daniel Stein, in the form of their daughter Gertrude, on the second-floor of 850 Beech Avenue—a modest but handsome nineteenth-century row-house of blue-painted brick and red-hued window trim in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania.

  3. 1 de ene. de 2009 · Gertrude Stein perplexes and perplexes again the reader's making of sense. In her 1927 Patriarchal Poetry, numerous, and indeed sometimes numbered, sentences seem to point toward a final sum of ...

  4. 22 de mar. de 1999 · Gertrude Stein, "Portraits and Repetition" (1935) Like much of her writing, Gertrude Stein's prose poem "Patriarchal Poetry" meditates on the limits of a limiting vocabulary. It troubles the presumptive coherence of symbolic discourse in order to acknowledge and enable a vast range of human subjectivity.

  5. Lost Generation. Lost Generation refers to a group of writers who came of age during World War I and dealt with the social changes the war brought. Synonyms: Expatriate poets, post-WWI poets. The term is also used to refer to a group of American expatriates living in Paris in the 20s. It was there, with Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway, that ...

  6. being in tears, governess a part of plums comfort with our. aghast either by feel torn. How can whose but dear me oh. Darling how is George. George is well. Violate Thomas but. or must with pine and near and do and dare defy. Haynes is Mabel Haynes. What was what was what it was what is what is what is is.

  7. 9 de feb. de 2005 · Picasso's Portrait of Gertrude Stein - In the early 1900s, Gertrude Stein’s residence in Paris became a gathering place for artists and writers. Some of the visitors who frequented 27, Rue de Fleurus were the young experimental painters whose work Gertrude and her brother Leo Stein had been collecting: Picasso, Braques, Manet, Renoir, Cézanne, Matisse.